The London Declaration

The London Declaration on NTDs - 30 January 2012

The London Declaration is a document resulting from a summit held in 2012 by Uniting to Combat NTDs. It is a pledge made by donor agencies, pharmaceutical companies, research institutions, non-governmental organizations, governments, and other stakeholders in the international health community to come together in their efforts stop NTDs. The Declaration has defined a number of goals and deliverables which are set to be achieved by the year 2020.

The London Declaration marks a pivotal moment in the fight against NTDs, as it created awareness of these previously neglected diseases and momentum for control programmes. The result has been a very promising increase in funding, advocacy, and expertise dedicated to NTD control.

WHO NTD Guidelines

In its 2012 Roadmap for Implementation to control of NTDs, the WHO recommended the following strategies as having the greatest impact on control:

Preventive chemotherapy - Mass drug administration (MDA) is currently one of the most important tools available in the contro of NTDs. It is especially useful against helminthiases (lymphatic filariasis, onchocerciasis, schistosomiasis, and soil-transmitted helminths) because safe, effective, and single-dose medicines are frequently being donated by pharmaceutical companies for use on the global scale.

Intensified disease management - Morbidity of many NTDs is easily reduced with currently available treatment and disease managment. Patients have better outcomes if they are identified and treated quickly, making case-detection and clinical managment essential to NTD control.

Vector and intermediate host control - Vectors and intermediate hosts play a role in propogating NTDs, and controlling them (e.g. using molluscicide on intermediate snail hosts of schistosomes) can help to control further incidence.

Veterinary public health at the human-animal interface - Animals are integral to the transmission of NTDs, often acting as a reservoir for disease. Providing veterinary public health and ensuring that people are staying away from potentially transmissive contact with animals is important.

Provision of safe water, sanitation, and hygiene - The spread of many NTDs is partly or fully facilitated by poor hygiene practices and lack of safe drinking water. Providing safe water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) can limit disease spread and curb morbidity of NTDs.

All of these strategies are important in the control of NTDs, but using them in conjunction is essential to breaking tranmission and eventually to elimination of NTDs. Studying the effectiveness of these interventions in different contexts gives us more information with which to predict the best possible disease control methods available.